Field
Colombian Museum, Jackson Park, undated. The Fine Arts Building
for the World's Colombian Exposition continued in use as the
first home of the Field Colombian Museum, later renamed the
Field Museum of 6atural History. When the Field Museum moved
to a new site at the south end of Grant Park, the building was
refurbished and reincarnated as the Museum of Science and Industry.

Carson
Pirie Scott & Company advertisement, Cap
and Gown, 1905. Andrew MacLeish joined the firm of Carson
Pirie Scott in 1866. Active in the Fourth Baptist Church,
MacLeish had been a trustee of the Old University of Chicago
and was one of the original trustees that met to organize the
new university in 1890.

President
Max Mason and Mr. and Mrs. William A. Wieboldt, Wieboldt Hall
groundbreaking, 1925. The Wieboldt Foundation provided funds
for a building to house the University's modern language departments.

The
Civic Spirit

An
Era of Institution-BuildingTaking over his father's
lumber business, Martin A. Ryerson shared Hutchinson's vision of the
ideal city and worked closely with him through much of his life. An
avid collector and student of art, he served as vicepresident of the
Art Institute and of the Field Museum and also supported the Chicago
Orphan Asylum, the Sprague Memorial Institute, the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra, and Poetry magazine. Ryerson had funded the physics laboratory
for the University, and his highminded approach to science was expressed
in his speech at the dedication of the Yerkes Observatory in 1897,
when he encouraged "the cultivation of science for its own sake" at
a time when so much energy was expended on "the improvement of material
conditions."

University fundraisers sometimes
had to compete with counterparts from other organizations. In a sense,
though, each institution lent prestige to the others, as each benefited
the city as a whole. William R. Harper sought close associations with
other educational organizations in the city. Some affiliated directly,
such as Rush Medical College, the Chicago Manual Training School, and
many years later the John Crerar Library; some discussed mergers or
cooperative ventures but remained independent, as did the Armour Institute
of Technology and Theodore Thomas's Chicago Orchestra. Others maintained
close ties through individual trustees or faculty members, as did the
Art Institute and Field Museum. Interaction among the city's educational
and cultural institutions strengthened them individually and collectively,
as each developed a unique identity and purpose.

Merchandisers
and AdvertisersEarly settlers
in Chicago foresaw its geographical potential as a center for trade.
Farmers needed supplies from the East and a way to deliver their goods
to the proper markets. Chicago was a connecting point for both land
and water transportation routes and soon became a hub of retail and
wholesale merchandising, as well as a collection point for grain, cattle,
and lumber from throughout the Middle West.

University benefactors founded
and ran many of Chicago's great retail establishments, including Marshall
Field's, Carson Pirie Scott & Co., Mandel Brothers, Wieboldt's,
Goldblatt's, Walgreen's drug stores, mailorder giants Sears, Roebuck
and Montgomery Ward's, as well as hardware and railroad supply companies.
"Not known as a great giver," Marshall Field donated land and sold additional
parcels for the original site of the University and later initiated
a challenge grant that raised $1,000,000 in endowment. Thomas W. Goodspeed,
who was responsible for much of the University's fundraising, said that
"the University did an equally great service for Mr. Field," opening
his eyes to the benefits of philanthropy and leading to other gifts,
especially for the creation of the Field Museum.

Julius Rosenwald, president
of Sears, Roebuck & Co. during its meteoric rise at the turn of
the century, became even better known as a philanthropist, believing
in "giving while you live" rather than establishing permanent trusts.
He sponsored schools for African-Americans in rural areas throughout
the South and raised money for YMCA buildings in urban areas, as well
as aiding the University of Chicago, the Associated Jewish Charities,
and the Museum of Science and Industry.

Adolphus Clay Bartlett
moved to Chicago in 1863 and took up the hardware business. His main
philanthropic interest was the Chicago Home for the Friendless. He became
a close friend of William Rainey Harper and a trustee of the University.
Bartlett donated funds for the men's gymnasium on campus named for his
son, and another son, Frederic Clay Bartlett, painted the interior murals
depicting a medieval tournament.